The torsion is a manner of characterizing the amount of slipping or twisting that a plane does when rolling along a surface or higher dimensional
affine manifold. For example, consider rolling a plane along a small circle drawn on a sphere. If the plane does not slip or twist, then when the plane is rolled all the way along the circle, it will also trace a circle in the plane. It turns out that the plane will have rotated (despite there being no twist whilst rolling it), an effect due to the
curvature of the sphere. But the curve traced out will still be a circle, and so in particular a closed curve that begins and ends at the same point. On the other hand, if the plane were rolled along the sphere, but it was allowed it to slip or twist in the process, then the path the circle traces on the plane could be a much more general curve that need not even be closed. The torsion is a way to quantify this additional slipping and twisting while rolling a plane along a curve. Thus the torsion tensor can be intuitively understood by taking a small parallelogram circuit with sides given by vectors
v and
w, in a space and rolling the
tangent space along each of the four sides of the parallelogram, marking the point of contact as it goes. When the circuit is completed, the marked curve will have been displaced out of the plane of the parallelogram by a vector, denoted T(v,w). Thus the torsion tensor is a tensor: a (bilinear) function of two input vectors
v and
w that produces an output vector T(v,w). It is
skew symmetric in the arguments
v and
w, a reflection of the fact that traversing the circuit in the opposite sense undoes the original displacement, in much the same way that twisting a
screw in opposite directions displaces the screw in opposite ways. The torsion tensor thus is related to, although distinct from, the
torsion of a curve, as it appears in the
Frenet–Serret formulas: the torsion of a connection measures a dislocation of a developed curve out of its plane, while the torsion of a curve is also a dislocation out of its
osculating plane. In the geometry of surfaces, the
geodesic torsion describes how a surface twists about a curve on the surface. The companion notion of
curvature measures how moving frames roll along a curve without slipping or twisting.
Example Consider the (flat)
Euclidean space M=\mathbb R^3. On it, we put a connection that is flat, but with non-zero torsion, defined on the standard Euclidean frame e_1,e_2,e_3 by the (Euclidean)
cross product: \nabla_{e_i}e_j = e_i\times e_j. Consider now the parallel transport of the vector e_2 along the e_1 axis, starting at the origin. The parallel vector field X(x)=a(x)e_2+b(x)e_3 thus satisfies X(0)=e_2, and the differential equation \begin{aligned} 0=\dot X &= \nabla_{e_1}X = \dot a e_2 + \dot b e_3 + a e_1\times e_2 + b e_1\times e_3 \\ &= (\dot a - b)e_2 + (\dot b + a)e_3. \end{aligned} Thus \dot a = b, \dot b = -a, and the solution is X = \cos x\,e_2 - \sin x\, e_3. Now the tip of the vector X, as it is transported along the e_1 axis traces out the helix x\,e_1 + \cos x\,e_2 - \sin x\, e_3. Thus we see that, in the presence of torsion, parallel transport tends to twist a frame around the direction of motion, analogously to the role played by torsion in the classical
differential geometry of curves.
Development One interpretation of the torsion involves the development of a curve. Suppose that a piecewise smooth closed loop \gamma:[0,1] \to M is given, based at the point p\in M, where \gamma(0)=\gamma(1)=p. We assume that \gamma is homotopic to zero. The curve can be developed into the tangent space at p in the following manner. Let \theta^i be a parallel coframe along \gamma, and let x^i be the coordinates on T_pM induced by \theta^i(p). A development of \gamma is a curve \tilde\gamma in T_pM whose coordinates x^i=x^i(t) sastify the differential equation dx^i = \gamma^*\theta^i. If the torsion is zero, then the developed curve \tilde\gamma is also a closed loop (so that \tilde\gamma(0)=\tilde\gamma(1)). On the other hand, if the torsion is non-zero, then the developed curve may not be closed, so that \tilde\gamma(0)\not=\tilde\gamma(1). Thus the development of a loop in the presence of torsion can become dislocated, analogously to a
screw dislocation. The foregoing considerations can be made more quantitative by considering a small parallelogram, originating at the point p\in M, with sides v,w\in T_pM. Then the tangent bivector to the parallelogram is v\wedge w\in\Lambda^2 T_pM. The development of this parallelogram, using the connection, is no longer closed in general, and the displacement in going around the loop is translation by the vector \Theta(v,w), where \Theta is the torsion tensor, up to higher order terms in v,w. This displacement is directly analogous to the
Burgers vector of crystallography. More generally, one can also transport a
moving frame along the curve \tilde\gamma. The
linear transformation that the frame undergoes between t=0,t=1 is then determined by the curvature of the connection. Together, the linear transformation of the frame and the translation of the starting point from \tilde\gamma(0) to \tilde\gamma(1) comprise the
holonomy of the connection.
The torsion of a filament In
materials science, and especially
elasticity theory, ideas of torsion also play an important role. One problem models the growth of vines, focusing on the question of how vines manage to twist around objects. The vine itself is modeled as a pair of elastic filaments twisted around one another. In its energy-minimizing state, the vine naturally grows in the shape of a
helix. But the vine may also be stretched out to maximize its extent (or length). In this case, the torsion of the vine is related to the torsion of the pair of filaments (or equivalently the surface torsion of the ribbon connecting the filaments), and it reflects the difference between the length-maximizing (geodesic) configuration of the vine and its energy-minimizing configuration.
Torsion and vorticity In
fluid dynamics, torsion is naturally associated to
vortex lines. Suppose that a connection D is given in three dimensions, with curvature 2-form \Omega_a^b and torsion 2-form \Theta^a = D\theta^a. Let \eta_{abc} be the skew-symmetric
Levi-Civita tensor, and t_a = \tfrac12\eta_{abc}\wedge\Omega^{bc}, s_{ab} = -\eta_{abc}\wedge\Theta^c. Then the Bianchi identities D\Omega^a_b = 0,\quad D\Theta^a = \Omega^a_b\wedge\theta^b. imply that Dt_a=0 and Ds_{ab} = \theta_a\wedge t_b - \theta_b\wedge t_a. These are the equations satisfied by an equilibrium continuous medium with moment density s_{ab}. ==Geodesics and the absorption of torsion==